“Lexical Negotiations” by Ryan Miller

“Lexical Negotiations” by Ryan Miller

 

Abstract:

Nearly every aspect of words is subject to alteration: pronunciation, spelling, part of speech, and definition. These aspects are often altered intentionally, yet speakers can err in each of them when using words. Using the semantics of ‘equality’ and ‘equity’ as an example, this paper resolves the puzzle by suggesting that such alterations are negotiated between speaker and audience, and introduces a formal framework from financial theory governing those negotiations. The model suggests that successful lexical negotiations are constrained by transaction costs, which implies that some conceptual engineering projects (like Haslanger’s revision of the word ‘woman’) are likely to fail even though the semantic revision of ‘equality’ and ‘equity’ was largely successful.

 

Biography:

Ryan is a National Science Foundation Doc.CH fellow in the Metaphysics of Quantum Objects group at the University of Geneva, working on grounding and parthood in realist interpretations of relativistic quantum mechanics. He has taught both at Johns Hopkins University and in Papua New Guinea. Having done a masters at the University of Saint Andrews, Ryan is still fascinated by the dispute between optimists and pessimists about the possibility of intentional language revision and conceptual engineering. He also really loves prata.

Date
Thursday, 18 August 2022

Time
4 - 6 pm

Venue
Philosophy Meeting Room (AS3-05-23)